Sumitrosis ancoroides (Schaeffer)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5549.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:81E6E742-1FE2-4480-AF93-3D92DF80A737 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1003866B-FFC4-FFB2-FF54-DEAEFB734A6F |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Sumitrosis ancoroides (Schaeffer) |
status |
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Sumitrosis ancoroides (Schaeffer) View in CoL
( Figs. 20 View FIGURES 1–22 , 78 View FIGURES 78–86 , 149–150 View FIGURES 142–161 )
Reared specimens. NORTH CAROLINA: Durham Co., Durham, Leigh Farm Park , 14.vi.2017, em. 21–30.vi.2017, T . S. Feldman, ex Stylosanthes biflora , # CSE3844 (2 adults, ZFMK) ; OKLAHOMA: Payne Co., Mehan , 36.014339° N, - 96.996744° W, 6.vii.2015, em. 15.vii.2015, M.W. Palmer, ex Strophostyles helvola , # CSE1813 (1 adult, MLBM); 28.vii.2015, em. by 1–4.viii.2015, M.W. Palmer, ex Strophostyles helvola , # CSE1899 (2 adults, ZFMK); 26.v.2016, em.?, M.W. Palmer, ex Strophostyles leiosperma , # CSE3071 (2 adults, MLBM / ZFMK); 1.ix.2017, em. 15–17.ix.2017, M.W. Palmer, ex Strophostyles helvola , # CSE4278 (1 adult, MLBM) GoogleMaps .
Photographed mines. OKLAHOMA: Payne Co., Mehan , 36.014339° N, - 96.996744° W, 13.v.2016, M.W. Palmer, Strophostyles leiosperma GoogleMaps .
Hosts. Fabaceae : Strophostyles helvola (L.) Elliott, S. *leiosperma (Torr. & A. Gray) Piper , S. umbellata (Muhl. ex Willd.) Britton , Stylosanthes biflora (L.) Britton, Sterns & Poggenb. ( Butte 1969; Ford & Cavey 1985; Clark et al. 2004). Rouse & Medvedev (1972) reported this beetle “on soybean” in Arkansas, and Staines’ (2006) listing of Glycine max (L.) Merr. as a larval host appears to be based only on this record.
Biology. Ford & Cavey’s (1985) statement that eggs “are laid in clusters on the underside of host leaves” is incorrect. Each egg is embedded singly in a pit chewed in the lower leaf surface and is visible from the upper surface ( Fig. 20 View FIGURES 1–22 ). The larva forms a flat blotch mine that is only visible on the upper leaf surface ( Fig. 78 View FIGURES 78–86 ), easily distinguished from the puffy, full-depth blotches of Odontota horni on Strophostyles . On S. leiosperma , mines were found on cotyledons as well as on full-sized leaves. Frass is in scattered, minute, elongate pellets, forming a denser, dark patch adjacent to the egg. The larva is yellowish and the pupa is orange. Adults “window-feed” in irregular patches on the lower leaf surface, leaving the upper epidermis intact.
Parasitoids. An adult Pnigalio sp. ( Eulophidae ) emerged from one of the mines collected in North Carolina
(CSE3893, BMNH). An adult of Chrysocharis occidentalis (Girault) ( Eulophidae ) emerged in a rearing vial that contained mines of both Odontota horni and Sumitrosis ancoroides on Strophostyles helvola (CSE1822, BMNH).
Notes. This is the first record of Sumitrosis ancoroides from North Carolina. The North Carolina specimens ( Fig. 149 View FIGURES 142–161 ), reared from Stylosanthes , belong to a different BIN (BOLD:ADP0312) than the Oklahoma specimens ( Fig. 150 View FIGURES 142–161 ), reared from Strophostyles (BOLD:ADF6919). The two BINs are separated by 10.72%, suggesting that S. ancoroides may represent a species complex. Ours are the only specimens in either BIN.
T |
Tavera, Department of Geology and Geophysics |
ZFMK |
Zoologisches Forschungsmuseum Alexander Koenig |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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